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Charles Darwin
“The eyes and mouth are widely opened, and the eyebrows raised. The frightened man at first stands like a statue motionless and breathless, or crouches down as if instinctively to escape observation. The heart beats quickly and violently . . . The skin instantly becomes pale . . . [and cold] perspiration exudes from it . . . The hairs on the skin stand erect . . . the mouth becomes dry . . .”
“Anxiety doesn’t ever go away. There’s not suddenly a sun-lit plateau where you’re never anxious about anything – it just takes different shapes and forms.” “My anxiety levels seem to go up the more I’m obviously scrutinized. When we’re doing the travelling for the documentaries and I’m meeting people as we go along – people think that’s incredibly difficult. I don’t mind that: that’s fine. It’s when you suddenly have: ‘right, you’ve got to do a piece to camera’. If you get something wrong, they say ‘try it again, I think you slightly hurried that bit’. And then the anxiety begins to build up...”
Michael Palin
Level of general anxiety assessed before admission to Oxford (n = 635) (Mellanby & Zimdars, 2011):
• More generally anxious, then greater exam stress. • But anxiety didn’t predict men’s exam performance • While higher trait anxiety predicted better performance
in women.
Anxiety and exam performance
Audience Participation: Embarrassing Moments
One person is going to be picked out to come out to the front and tell us all about an embarrassing experience. The aim is
that you tell the story in 60 seconds… and make everyone laugh at least once.
Unhelpful anxiety is when we make threatening misinterpretations of what is going to happen.
Process 1: Thoughts anticipating threat
Process 3: Negative Images
“I have an image of me looking guilty, nervous,
anxious, embarrassed. It’s my face – the features are distorted, intensified, big
nose, weak chin, big ears, red face. Slightly awkward body posture, introverted
body posture, turning in on myself. I look stupid.”
“Love looks forward, hate looks back, anxiety has eyes all over its head.”
Process 4: Attention to threat
… and actually the attention is inwards
1. Phobias. 9.1% 2. Social Anxiety. 7.1% 3. Panic disorder. 2.7% 4. Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). 1.2% 5. Generalised anxiety disorder (GAD). 2.7% 6. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). 3.6%
12 month prevalence
1. ‘What’s going right for me right now?’
2. At end of day, list three positive events.
3. Keep data log of positive events.
Switching attention
JOY, GRATITUDE, SERENITY,
INTEREST, HOPE, HAPPINESS,
AMUSEMENT, INSPIRATION, AWE,
LOVE
Switching attention:
Savouring
Good mental health tips
1. Activities crucial (with attention on the activity rather than self). 2. Basics: good sleep, regular and healthy meals, physical activity. 3. Thoughts are not facts. Test them out. Then let them go. 4. Avoid avoidance of other people. Use social support. Share fears. 5. Limit worry and rumination. 6. Switch focus to the positive rather than threat.
“People see people like myself and they say ‘you have the best job in the world, you’re free of cares and gosh we’d all like to be like you and to be able to stand up and make a speech and all that’. I don’t do any of those things without at some point feeling anxious.” “One has to confront these situations. If you avoid them it’s not great because there will always be that little bit in your memory, which says ‘I cant do that; I was never able to do that’. So even if you’ve tried and failed, at least you did it and it wasn’t so bad.”
Michael Palin